Social Mobility in Europe

ISBN13: 9780199258451ISBN10: 0199258457 Hardback, 468 pages
Jan 2005,  In Stock

Price:

$170.00 (04)

Description

Social Mobility in Europe is the most comprehensive study to date of trends in intergenerational social mobility. It uses data from 11 European countries covering the last 30 years of the twentieth century to analyze differences between countries and changes through time.

The findings call into question several long-standing views about social mobility. We find a growing similarity between countries in their class structures and rates of absolute mobility: in other words, the countries of Europe are now more alike in their flows between class origins and destinations than they were thirty years ago. However, differences between countries in social fluidity (that is, the relative chances, between people of different class origins, of being found in given class destinations) show no reduction and so there is no evidence supporting theories of modernization which predict such convergence. Our results also contradict the long-standing Featherman Jones Hauser hypothesis of a basic similarity in social fluidity in all industrial societies 'with a market economy and a nuclear family system'. There are considerable differences between countries like Israel and Sweden, where societal openness is very marked, and Italy, France, and Germany, where social fluidity rates are low. Similarly, there is a substantial difference between, for example, the Netherlands in the 1970s (which was quite closed) and in the 1990s, when it ranks among the most open societies.

Mobility tables reflect many underlying processes and this makes it difficult to explain mobility and fluidity or to provide policy prescriptions. Nevertheless, those countries in which fluidity increased over the last decades of the twentieth century had not only succeeded in reducing class inequalities in educational attainment but had also restricted the degree to which, among people with the same level of education, class background affected their chances of gaining access to better class destinations.

Features

  • Based on large data set from 11 European countries over 30 years
  • Contradicts wide-held beliefs, such as there being a basic similarity in social fludity in all industrial societies
  • First study of social mobility to introduce a temporal dimension

Product Details

468 pages; 42 figures; ISBN13: 978-0-19-925845-1ISBN10: 0-19-925845-7

About the Author(s)

Edited by Richard Breen, Official Fellow, Nuffield College, Oxford University

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